How to Maximize Your Social Security Income (and avoid these 6 costly mistakes)

We’re all about retirement planning, and we often talk about Roth IRAs and other retirement accounts and strategies.

But what about Social Security? It’s an often overlooked, though highly critical, component of your retirement plan.

There are ways to maximize your Social Security income, but the most effective strategies need to be put in place before you actually begin collecting benefits.

This can be confusing, because there are several different options as to when you can take Social Security. For example, you can take benefits beginning at ages 62, 67, 70, or any age you choose.

However, know that your age at the time of retirement will affect the amount of your benefit, as well as the benefits you’ll receive for the rest of your life.

When to Take Your Benefits

If you take benefits as soon as you are eligible – which is age 62 – you may get your benefits early, but that will reduce the benefits you receive in the future, and not by a little, either!

Your full retirement age

This is an important age to understand. Where once the age of full retirement was 65 for everyone, the age has been creeping up for those born after 1943. The new full retirement age will be 67 for anyone born in 1960 or later. And if you were born between 1943 and 1954, the age is 66. (There are actually graduations based on age that will actually make the full retirement age an odd number, like 66 years and 3 months, based on the exact year you were born.)

Full retirement age is considered the baseline for everything related to Social Security. It is the age at which you will receive 100% of your basic Social Security benefit. Should you retire before that age, your benefits will be reduced.

Delaying Benefits Past Your Full Retirement Age

If you delay collecting benefits until you are past your full retirement age, you can increase your monthly benefit – within limits.

The current law allows you to increase your monthly benefit by 8% per year for every year that you delay past full retirement age. So for example, if your full retirement age is 66, you can increase your benefit by 32% by delaying collecting benefits until age 70 (4 years times 8%). If your full retirement age is 67, you can increase it by 24% by delaying benefits until age 70 (3 years times 8%).

There is no additional incentive to delay collecting of benefits past age 70, so for that reason you should assume age 70 as the latest age at which you will begin collecting your Social Security benefits.

Taking Benefits Before Your Full Retirement Age

As noted above, you can take benefits as early as age 62, but the benefit will be reduced. Generally speaking, your monthly benefit will be reduced by between 5% and 7% for each year that you take benefits in advance of your full retirement age.

For example, if your full retirement age is 66, and you begin taking benefits at 62, your monthly benefit will be reduced by about 25%. If your benefit at full retirement age is $1,600 per month, it will be reduced to $1,200 ($1,600 times 75%) should you begin taking benefits at 62.

And since taking benefits early would result in a reduced monthly income, you will probably need to supplement your income with some form of earned income. But if you do, keep in mind that your Social Security benefits will be reduced if you earn above a certain amount.

You can earn up to $15,480 (2014) without having your Social Security benefits reduced. Beyond that threshold, you’ll give up one dollar in benefits for every two dollars in earnings. If you earn $35,480 while collecting your benefits at age 62, you’ll lose $10,000 in Social Security benefits ($35,480 – $15,480 = $20,000 divided by 2). If you’re making enough money, it is possible to completely eliminate your Social Security benefit.

Ouch.

However, this isn’t entirely as bad as it might seem, because the reduction in benefits now can increase your benefits later. Social Security automatically recalculates your benefits each year that you’ve had any earnings. That means that if you are making more money than you have made in many of the 35 years that are used to compute your benefit, they will be replaced by the higher income you’re earning in retirement, and that will result in increased Social Security benefits going forward.

Social Security Benefits that You Are Entitled To

Under the law, you must earn 40 credits in order to qualify for Social Security benefits. A single credit is equal to one calendar quarter in which you had earnings that were subject to Social Security income taxes. Since there are four quarters in a year, 40 credits works out to be 10 years. That’s how long you have to pay into the system in order to qualify.

Your spouse will be subject to the same requirement, and can file for benefits in his or her own name. Your spouse can collect the benefit that is the higher of the benefit that he or she qualifies for, or 50% of your benefit if you are the higher wage earner.

Important note: If you are the higher earning spouse, and you begin taking benefits at 62, your spouse will get the higher of the benefit based on his or her income, or only about one- third of your benefit, rather than half.

Timing Factors on the Collection of Social Security Benefits

As a starting point, you need to find out exactly when your full retirement age is, and your spouse must do the same if you’re married.

Next, you need to make a reasonable estimate of your life expectancy. You can do this by going the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) Life Expectancy Calculator.

Health status is another factor. If you are in excellent health overall, and your family history confirms that it tends to be the case even in old age, you might make an adjustment to the Social Security life expectancy accordingly. Conversely, if you have a condition that is expected to shorten your life, it makes sense to begin collecting benefits early.

Then, consideryour overall financial resources. If you’re in a situation where you absolutely need the income now – and there are no other resources available – then there’s little choice but to begin taking benefits as early as possible. But if you have financial resources that will enable you to cover your living expenses for a few years, then delaying receipt of Social Security benefits can make a big difference in your monthly benefit later on.

Future employment plans. Not everyone plans to stop working when they reach their 60s. If you enjoy the work that you do, and it is something that you can do until at least age 70, then delaying benefits is an obvious and profitable option.

Finally, personal preferences have a place in your decision. If it is your intention to move to the beach and to enjoy a life of leisure while you are still relatively young and in good health, then taking benefits early would work better for your situation.

Calculating Your Monthly Social Security Benefit

Benefits are calculated based on a formula that includes your highest 35 years earnings, indexed for inflation through age 59. Though it is fashionable for people to try to minimize their taxable income (particularly the self-employed), retirement planning should make you think otherwise, because the best way to increase your monthly benefit is to increase your income during your working years.

This is also an excellent reason to continue working into your 60s if you are in your peak earning years. Each year in which you earn a high income will knock out a lower earning year, and increase your monthly Social Security benefit.

6 Common Mistakes Involving Social Security

These are mistakes that people make in regard to Social Security on a routine basis:

1. Relying on the good folks at the SSA to provide the right advice. SSA staff are not financial advisors, and they don’t know your personal financial situation. They can explain your options, but they will not recommend which way you should go.

2. Thinking that financial advisors can also provide the right Social Security advice. Social Security is an entirely separate category that is now increasingly being serviced by specialists, and beyond the scope of financial advisors.

3. Checking to make sure that your earnings history is accurate. Sure, it’s easier to assume that SSA records are accurate, but if they aren’t, you could be losing out on benefits you paid for.

4. Applying for benefits at 62 – just because you can. The majority of people begin collecting benefits at 62, usually with little thought to the long term consequences.

5. Thinking that your spouse should collect benefits at 62. This goes hand-in-hand with the mistaken notion that his or her benefits can increase based on your delayed retirement. But SSA won’t allow that.

6. Assuming that you won’t live very long. Given that the average person who is 65 will live another 20 years, collecting benefits too early in the process could prove to be a major strategic mistake.

Strategies to Maximize your Social Security Benefits

You should start seriously thinking about this when you’re in your 50s. That’s when you will have the time and the up-to-date information available to make an intelligent decision. Once you actually go on Social Security benefits, you’ll be locked into whatever option you have chosen.

But…

There are some strategies that may get you out of that lock-in:

File and suspend. This is a strategy that will help you to build a cash reserve. You file your benefits claim, then suspend it. As long as you’re not collecting benefits, your monthly benefit amount will continue to increase. But if you decide that you need cash in a hurry, you can unsuspend your claim, and the SSA will send you a check for the unpaid monthly benefits (but understand that it can take up to three months before the check will arrive).

This can also work well if during the suspension period you have a major health event. If you are suspending in order to build up future benefits, and you have a health event that causes you to believe that you won’t live as long as you originally thought, you can go all the way back to the age at which you suspended your benefits, and have them paid to you now in a lump sum.

File and suspend for spousal benefits. This is actually a fairly common strategy. You file for benefits and immediately request a suspension before any benefits are paid. This will trigger your spouse’s ability to apply for spousal benefits on your record. The SSA will not allow that unless you have already filed for your benefits. This allows one spouse to collect benefits while the other continues to build up an even larger benefit.

Let’s say that you file for Social Security benefits at 67. This will enable your spouse to get a dependent spouse benefit. If you suspend benefit payments immediately, you can then activate them at age 70 so that you’ll get the maximum monthly benefit you are entitled to.

It’s important to understand that you have to be at least at your full retirement age, and only one member of the couple can file and suspend benefits at the same time.

Claim now, claim more later. You do this using an ex-spouse’s earnings record, and it works just the same as if you were a currently married person. You have to be eligible under your own earnings in addition to those of your former spouse. But when you reach your full retirement age you can file an application for divorced spousal benefits. You’ll then postpone your own benefits in favor of those of your former spouse.

You can even do this if your ex-spouse has died, by filing for survivor benefits. In the meantime, your own earnings credits will be increasing, which will entitle you to a higher benefit if you switch it over when you reach age 70.

File a protective filing statement. This is a good option if you’re not sure when you will file. This is not a formal application, but it will preserve a given filing date for as long as six months. As you move toward the end of the six-month period, you can simply file again. This is an excellent way to hedge your benefits if you are at your full retirement age and still not sure of what your future holds.

For example, there may be certain financial opportunities available to you that would make collecting Social Security benefits unnecessary. But if you aren’t sure how that will actually happen, and you want to lock in collecting benefits as of a certain age, the protective filing statement will enable you to keep your options open. You can do this simply by contacting the Social Security office, either in person or in writing.

Just in Case Your Filing Choice Turns Out to Be a Mistake…

In the event that you file for benefits early and realize that you made a mistake, you do have up to 12 months from the date you filed to make a change. This is referred to as a withdrawal of application, and it’s not quite as easy as it sounds.

Should you withdraw, you will need to repay any and all benefits that you collected during the 12 month period. But once you do, it will have the effect of undoing your original filing. It’s a valuable option to have, but it is one that you can choose only once in your lifetime.

If you cannot repay the benefits you have already received, or the 12 month timeframe is expired, you can still suspend your claim. If you do this after you reach your full retirement age, you can once again build up retirement credits, at a rate of 8% per year (similar to a delay in collecting benefits). The strategy will no longer be effective once you reach age 70, since there will be no increase in your benefit beyond that age.

NOTE: Congress is considering eliminating this loophole, so it is entirely possible that it will not apply by the time you’re ready to execute the strategy. Obviously, this is a pretty tricky topic; if you are thinking about retiring soon, or if you have any questions, make sure you see your financial professional.

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